Boomert, Arie
1996 The Prehistoric Sites of Tobago: A Catalogue and Evaluation. Alkmaar, The Netherlands.

Carlson, Lisabeth A.
1993 Strings of Command: Manufacture and Utilization of Shell Beads Among the Taino Indians of the West
Indies. M.A. thesis, University of Florida, Gainesville.
1999 . First Contact: The Coralie Site, Grand Turk, Turks and Caicos Islands, Ph.D. dissertation, Department
of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainesville.

Hoogland, Menno L.P.
1995 In Search of the Native Population of Pre-Columbian Saba (400-1450 A.D.). Part Two. Settlements in Their
Natural and Social Environment. PhD dissertation, Leiden University, Leiden.

Dubelaar, Cornelis N.
1995 The Petroglyphs of the Lesser Antilles, the Virgin Islands, and Trinidad. Publications of the Foundation
for Scientific Research in the Caribbean, No. 35, Amsterdam.

Book Chapters

Allaire, Louis
1996 Visions of Cannibals: Distant Islands and Distant Lands. In The Lesser Antilles in the Age
of European Expansion, edited by Robert L. Paquette and Stanley L. Engerman, pp. 33-49,
University Press of Florida Gainesville.

Keegan, William F.
1996 Columbus was a Cannibal: Myth and the First Encounters. In The Lesser Antilles in the Age of
European Expansion, edited by Robert L. Paquette and Stanley L. Engerman, pp. 18-32,
University Press of Florida Gainesville.

Keegan, William F., Morgan D. Maclachlan and Bryan Byrne
1998 Social Foundations of Taino Caciques.
In Chiefdoms and Chieftaincy in the Americas, edited by Elsa Redmond, pp. 217-244,
University Press of Florida Gainesville.

Kiple, Kenneth F. and Kriemhild C. Ornelas
1996 After the Encounter: Disease and Demographics in the Lesser Antilles. In The Lesser Antilles in
the Age of European Expansion, edited by Robert L. Paquette and Stanley L. Engerman, pp. 50-67,
University Press of Florida Gainesville.

Siegel, Peter E.
1995 The Archaeology of Community Organization in the Tropical Lowlands: A Case Study from Puerto Rico. In Archaeology
in the Lowland American Tropics, edited by Peter W. Stahl, pp. 42-65, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

INTRODUCTION

The Bullen Bibliography of Caribbean Archaeology Compiled by William F. Keegan
With the assistance of Anne V. Stokes, Lee Ann Newsom, and Geoffrey SeniorRipley P. and Adelaide K. Bullen Research Library
Florida Museum of Natural History
University of Florida
Gainesville, Florida 32611-7800

Foreword

In
the Fall of 1987, Bill Keegan had just arrived and was settling
in at the Florida Museum of Natural History (then Florida State
Museum). Early one morning, as he is wont to do when on a mission,
Jerald Milanich came charging into his office. "Adelaide's
sons are in town to close up the house on 6th street. If we want
any of her books we need to get them now." Dana and Pierce
Bullen were already at the house when we backed a Suburban filled
with knocked-down boxes onto the lawn. There seemed to be books,
filing cabinets, and map cases in every room; and in the Florida
room on the side of the house there was a small library, a mini-stacks,
of five long rows of double-sided floor-to-ceiling bookshelves.
Several hours later they departed with a van filled with books.

These were just Adelaide's books. Ripley's
were already collected in the Museum's Ford Library. Something needed
to be done with what was the core of an important library of Caribbean
archaeology.

A proposal to catalog and organize the Bullens's
library collections was submitted to the Florida Museum's Associates,
a not-for-profit support group at the Museum. The Associates very
generously contributed $3400 to the cause, and the Ripley P. and
Adelaide K. Bullen Research Library was created. The Department
of Anthropology hired a student to inventory Adelaide's books while
the Associates's support was being used to employ Lee Newsom in
cataloging Ripley's library. After many months the Caribbean materials
were identified and separated from the books on Florida, for which
Milanich assumed responsibility.

During this time the remaining volumes (volume
8 excepted) of the Proceedings of the Caribbean Congresses for the
Study of the Pre-Columbian Cultures of the Lesser Antilles came
looking for a home. Adelaide Kendall Bullen had founded a small
publishing company called Kendall Books, and the sons were trying
to liquidate the assets. Adelaide had kept at least ten copies of
each of the Congress Proceedings at Kendall Books, and Pierce Bullen
offered them for sale at a substantially reduced price. The second
use of the Associates grant went to purchasing those volumes for
resale. Prices were raised to reflect the fair-market value of these
out-of-print volumes, and the proceeds have been specified for use
in building the Bullen Research Library.

In the Spring of 1988 Keegan learned from
Louis Allaire that the Centre de Recherches Carabes at the University
of Montreal was going to close at the end of May. Correspondence
with Mr. Pierre Trudel, L'adjoint au vice-recteur l'enseignement
et la recherche, led to the shipment of what was described as "environ
6 botes" to the U.S. Customs office at Tampa. When Keegan arrived
in Tampa to pay for the books and to clear them through Customs
he found that 19 boxes were waiting for him. These volumes are also
being sold to support the Bullen Research Library. Thanks are due
Mr. Trudel and Dr. Allaire for their assistance in obtaining these
books. Dr. Allaire is also due thanks for proofreading the French
entries in the bibliography; we are, of course, responsible for
any remaining errors.

Working from the research bibliographies
compiled in the course of writing articles, combined with the catalog
of Bullen's books, we embarked on the arduous task of producing
this bibliography. Since several comprehensive bibliographies exist
for the region prior to 1976, we decided to concentrate on publications
since that date. Obviously, books and manuscripts in the Bullens's
libraries precede that date, so we did not strictly adhere to the
mid-1970s end date. It was during this process of computerizing
the files that Anne Stokes became involved. Dara Silverberg was
invaluable in helping to collate separate bibliographies in computer
files. Special thanks to Dr. Kathleen Deagan who provided copies
of her research bibliographies on diskette.

With this publication we begin the continuous
process of enlarging and revising a comprehensive bibliography of
Caribbean archaeology. We are very grateful to those of you who
contributed reprints and lists of your own publications. Your reward
is your inclusion in the present volume. We are committed to providing
copies of the bibliography free of charge to our colleagues who
contribute copies of their reprints to the Bullen Research Library.
We encourage everyone to make such contributions of their work,
to bring recent publications that we have omitted to our attention,
and to identify any corrections that need to be made. Thank you.
Finally, since the present volume is not complete. A list of other
bibliographies, including the handbook of Latin American Studies,
along with an index to the Current Research section in American
Antiquity, are provided. Finally, three other sources of information
about the region are available. To submit information to these contact:

Handbook of Latin American Studies, Library of Congress:
Dr. William Keegan
Florida Museum of Natural History
University of Florida
Gainesville, FL 32611.
E-mail: keegan@flmnh.ufl.edu

Prepared by a number of scholars for the Hispanic Division in the Library of Congress,
University of Florida Press, Gainesville, 1935-1978; University of Texas Press, Austin 1979-present.
Now on-line as a searchable database
(Handbook of Latin American Studies)

Dubelaar, Cees N.
1991 Bibliography
of South American and Antillean Petroglyphs, Foundation for
Scientific Research in the Caribbean Region, Amsterdam.

Ewen, Charles R.
1990 The Archaeology
of Spanish Colonialism in the Southeastern United States and the
Caribbean. Guides to the Archaeological Literature of the Immigrant
Experience in America, No. 1. Society for Historical Archaeology,
Pleasant Hill, CA.

Caribbean Congresses

(Publications listed by Number as IACA in Bibliography)

1st Congress, Fort-de-France, Martinique, 1961:First International Convention for the
Study of Pre-Columbian Culture in the Lesser Antilles, Part I and
Part II, Société d'Histoire de la Martinique, Fort-de-France,
Martinique, 1963.

2nd Congress, St. Ann's Garrison, Barbados, 1967:Proceedings of the Second International
Congress for the Study of Pre-Columbian Cultures in the
Lesser Antilles, Barbados Museum, Barbados, 1968.

3rd Congress, St. George's, Grenada, 1969:Proceedings of the Third International
Congress for the Study of Pre-Columbian Cultures of the Lesser Antilles,
Grenada National Museum, Grenada, 1970.

4th Congress, Castries, St. Lucia, 1971:Proceedings of the Fourth International
Congress for the Study of Pre-Columbian Cultures
of the Lesser Antilles, St. Lucia Archaeological and Historical
Society, Castries, St. Lucia, 1973.

5th Congress, Antigua, 1973:Proceedings of the Fifth International
Congress for the Study of Pre-Columbian Cultures of the Lesser Antilles,
The Antigua Archaeological Society, 1974.

7th Congress, Caracas, Venezuela, 1977:Proceedings of the Seventh International
Congress for the Study of Pre-Columbian Cultures of the Lesser Antilles,
Centre de Recherches Caraïbes, Montreal, 1978.

8th Congress, St. Kitts, 1979:
Lewenstein, Suzanne M., editor (1980) Proceedings
of the Eighth International Congresses for the Study of the Pre-Columbian
Cultures of the Lesser Antilles, Arizona State Anthropological
Research Papers Number 22, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona.

9th Congress, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, 1981:Proceedings of the Ninth International
Congress for the Study of the Pre-Columbian Cultures of the Lesser
Antilles, Centre de Recherches Caraïbes, Montreal, 1983

10th Congress, Fort-de-France, Martinique, 1983:Proceedings of the Tenth International
Congress for the Study of the Pre-Columbian Cultures of the Lesser
Antilles, Centre de Recherches Caraïbes, Montreal, 1985.